. AMERICAN. IN 



597 



Spirit in man; from Rev. Philip Stafford Moxom, 

 rmons upon "The Religion <>f Hope": from 

 Samuel Bond Randall. "\Valking with God." to 

 which I>r. Hamilton ('. Mabie contributed an intro- 

 duction: and from Rev. Samuel F. ilotchkin. "The 

 I'n-een Christ." " The Shadow Christ." by (Jerald 

 Stanlt-v Lee. was intended as an introduction to 

 Christ 'himself. "The Great Meaning of Metanoia." 

 by Tread well Walden. went through a new edition 

 with a supplementary essay. "Death and the Res- 

 urrection " was an inquiry into their true nature by 

 I)]-. Calvin S. Gerhard. Dr. .lames II. Brooks pub- 

 lished " lie is not Here : The Resurrection of 

 Christ": Dr. Kverett Stackpole. "Prophecy: or. 

 Speaking for God " : Dr. Daniel S. Gregory, " Christ's 

 Trumpet Call to the Ministry: or, The Preacher 

 and the Preaching for the Present Crisis": while 

 Floyd W. Tompkins. Jr., described " The Christian 

 Life : What it is. and How to Live it " : and B. W. 

 Maturin prescribed "Some Principles and Practices 

 of the Spiritual Life." Dr. James Russell Miller 

 defined "Things to Live for," and advocated "A 

 Gentle Heart" above all things. Dr. William C. 

 Roberts wrote on the manifoldness of "New Testa- 

 ment Conversions": George T. Lemmon promised 

 Better Things for Sons of God"; M. W. Gifford 

 laid down " Laws of the Soul " ; Ralph Waldo Trine 

 defined " What all the World's a-seeking" to be the 

 vital law of true life, true greatness, power, and 

 happiness : and H. J. Harald made a contribution 

 to the study of religions, entitled " The Knowledge 

 of Life." " Beyond the Horizon," by Dr. Henry D. 

 Kim ball, was the title of bright side chapters on 

 the future life; Dr. Burdett Hart presented "As- 

 pects of Heaven " ; and " Heaven " was the subject 

 of six sermons by Dr. Richard Montague. M. C. 

 Hazard compiled a collection of poems entitled 

 "The Tearless Land." Deeply religious in tone 

 were the " Story of the Heavenly Camp Fires." by 

 'One with a New Name" ; and "The Farmer and 

 the Lord," by George H. Hepworth, a companion 

 volume to his "Hiram Golfs Religion." "Good 

 Cheer for a Year " was selected from the writings 

 of the Right Rev. Phillips Brooks, and " New Starts 

 in Life, and Other Sermons" was. the title of the 

 eighth series of his sermons given to the public. 

 "The World for Christ " was the title of a series of 

 addresses on missions delivered at Syracuse Uni- 

 versity on the Graves Foundation, 1896. by Dr. 

 Adolphus J. F. Behrends : "Visions and Service," 

 of 14 discourses delivered in college chapels by 

 William Lawrence, Bishop of Massachusetts ; 

 " Mornings in the College Chapel." of short ad- 

 dresses to young men on personal religion, by 

 Francis Greenwood Peabody ; and " Progress in 

 Spiritual Knowledge," of a memorial volume of 

 Rev. Chauncey Giles. "Sermons" of Dr. John R. 

 Warner were published, with a sketch of his life by 

 his daughter, Mary Warner Moore; B. B. Coi; 

 spoke " Last Words for my Young Hearers and 

 Readers " : ' The Fisherman and his Friends " was 

 the title of a series of revival sermons, by Dr. L. A. 

 Banks: Dr. S. D. McConnell issued " A Year's Ser- 

 mons " ; Rev. George Hodges delivered eight lectures 

 on "Faith and Social Service" before the Lowell 

 Institute ; and sermons by Rev. John Tunis on 

 " The Faith by which we Stand " had a preface by 

 Bishop Potter. George A. Gates, D. D., contributed 

 a biographical introduction to " The Imperial 

 Christ," by John Patterson Coyle, D. D., whose 

 Sunday-evening sermons for the people, entitled 

 Workingmen and the Church." were also pub- 

 lished. Rev. Cortland Myers preached on " Mid- 

 night in a Great City " : Dr. Lyman Abbott was 

 heard from on "Christianity and Social Problems" 

 and collaborated with Rev. Francis Brown, Rev. 

 George Matheson, and others on " Prophets of the 



Christian Faith." " Heroes of Faith " wa- a study 

 of a chapter from the Greek New Te-i.-nm i 

 beginners, by Burns A.Jenkins: "The Tab;, 

 tar" was a series of meditations for a month of 

 mornings, by Bishop J. H. Vincent : and 

 Bonaventnre Hammer arranged " The Spiritual 

 Fxerciso of an Kight Days' Retreat " for general 

 use. Rev. Joseph L. Andreis wrote upon The 

 Christian at Mass": and devotional addresses, bv 

 B. W. Randolph, on the Ten Commandments, were 

 entitled "The Law of Sinai"; "David's Harp in 

 Song and Story." a history of the Psalms in all the 

 ages of the Church, by Dr. Joseph Waddell Clokey, 

 had an introduction by Dr. W. J. Robinson; "Ser- 

 mons on the Gospels," published during 1896, cov- 

 ered the period from " Advent to Trinity ": "An- 

 notations on the Gospel according to St. John " 

 were made by Dr. A. Spaeth ; Rev. Frank J. Good- 

 win was the author of "A Harmony of the Life of 

 St. Paul according to the Acts of the Apostles and 

 the Pauline Epistles"; and Rev. S. W. Pratt, of 

 " The Life and Epistles of St. Paul, harmonized and 

 chronologically arranged in Scripture Language." 

 " Annotations on the Epistles of Paul to the Ephe- 

 sians, Philippians, Colossians. and Thessalonians," 

 by Drs. E. T. Horn and A. G. Voigt, appeared in 

 the " Lutheran Commentary," as did "Annotations 

 on the Gospel according to St. Luke." by Dr. H. L. 

 Baugher. " Pauline Charity" was the theme of dis- 

 courses on First Corinthians, by Dr. Joseph Cross, 

 and " The Theology of the Apostles Peter and Paul, 

 in their own Words,'' was the work of Dr. Augustus 

 Schultze. "Patmos: or, The Unveiling," by Rev. 

 Charles Beecher. was. as its name indicates, an ex- 

 position of the Apocalypse of St. John. Lucy Rider 

 Meyer. M. D., edited " The Shorter Bible chrono- 

 logically arranged," to which Bishop John H. Vin- 

 cent contributed an introduction ; R. A. Torrey 

 told " How to study the Bible with Greatest Profit " ; 

 and Dr. F. S. Schenck supplied " The Bible-Reader's 

 Guide." A new enlarged edition was published of 

 " The Critical Handbook of the Greek New Testa- 

 ment." by Dr. Edward C. Mitchell, and Part I ap- 

 peared of " The Open Bible," helps for the Bible 

 reader, arranged according to the Chautauqua sys- 

 tem of education, by Henry Berkowitz. Richard 

 Green Moulton edited Vols." II to X of "The Mod- 

 ern Reader's Bible," a series of works from the 

 sacred Scriptures in modern literary form, and was 

 the author of a work upon " The Literary Study of 

 the Bible," in addition to contributing, with Drs. 

 John Punnett Peters. Alexander Balmain Bruce, 

 and others, to " The Bible as Literature," the intro- 

 duction to which was by Dr. Lyman Abbott. " The 

 Jewish Scriptures" were reviewed in anything but 

 a reverent spirit by Amos Kidder Fiske. The 

 twenty-second series of "Sermons on the Interna- 

 tional Sunday-school Lessons" for 1897, by the 

 Monday Ciub," appeared, as did "Sunday-school 

 Studies " on the same, by Dr. E. E. IIoss. and ' Illus- 

 trative Notes. 1897." by Jesse Lyman Hurlbut and 

 Robert Remington Doherty. The " Epworth League 

 Reading Course, 1896-'97" filled four volumes, and 

 E. H. Rawlings wrote on the interdependence of 

 " The Pastor and the League." " Child Life in our 

 Mission Fields: or, Pen Pictures from Busy Work- 

 ers" were compiled by Daisy Lambeth and Kate 

 Harlan; Calvin Dill "Wilson and James Knapp 

 Reeve described "Bible Boys and Girls": Rev. Er- 

 nest B. Layard wrote on "Religion in Boyhood " ; 

 while "Be'ulah Land; or, Words of Good Cheer to 

 the Old " came from Dr. Theodore L. Cuyler. 

 "Beauty for Ashes: or, Consolation for the Be- 

 reaved," by Rev. William C. Wilbor. had an intro- 

 duction by Bishop J. H. Vincent. " Bible Selections 

 for Daily Devotion " were selected and arranged by 

 Dr. Sylvanus Stall." " Primitive Buddhism " had 



